1nutworld
Posts: 365
Joined: 4/13/2014 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Mgellis This may be of some help... Newport Paper 33: U.S. Naval Strategy in the 1980s Just go to Google, type this in, add the search term pdf to the search, and it should take you to various places, like fas.org, where you can download the book. It includes discussions of what and where the Soviets had in terms of naval forces during the 1980s. It does not provide specific ship types, but it will say things like, "1 CV/H, 1 D, 1 SS, 1 MLSF" as the typical Caribbean deployment. Aside from the forward deployments, does anyone know if the Soviets favored a few SAGs with lots of ships (e.g., a dozen or so warships and half-a-dozen support vessels) or a lot of SAGs with only a few ships (e.g., each SAG with three or four warships, plus one or two support vessels)? A related question...what was the purpose of a SAG for the Soviets? From what I can tell, their strategy was not so much power projection but a combination of protect the homeland/protect strategic submarines from attack/deny the enemy the use of the sea via bombers, subs, etc. I'm guessing the SAGs would have been to keep NATO away from their strategic subs (some of which were parked in the mid-Atlantic) and as anti-convoy/commerce raiding forces. Does this sound right? Mark, To answer your question as best as I am able. When I was on the Eisenhower 1990-1994, our Airwing usually made recon flights over some Soviet Surface units. I was fortunate enough to have buddies who would occasionally share some photos/info about those flights. For the most part the SAG's that we encountered were the smaller type that you described above. However there were times when the Fleets of course were on exercises where the larger SAG's were involved, but I can't state the exact composition. And yes for the most part, while the USN doctrine was power projection, the Soviet doctrine was mostly (sub) Fleet defense, anti-convoy. The Kiev class type ships and her escorts (to the best of my research ability and knowledge, as has been discussed) just wouldn't be able to function in a "power projection" type doctrine, due to the various limits imposed on the carrier/aircraft. Does this help any?
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